This is my unhappy face: Google is killing off Picasa. “Google announced this morning that it will no longer support the Picasa desktop application as of March 16, 2016. In addition, it will be archiving Picasa Web Albums data at a later date while encouraging those users to convert to Google Photos instead.” I like Picasa. I like it better than Google Photos. Sigh.

Well, that’s not right. King Arthur has been kicked off Facebook because Facebook doesn’t believe it’s his real name. “This week, Facebook did what the Saxons and English Heritage could not do, and made King Arthur a ‘non-person’, unceremoniously deleting his account. They asked – as many a policeman, judge, bailiff and High Sheriff have done before – for proof that he is indeed called King Arthur Uther Pendragon. He duly supplied his driving licence and passport, which clearly show his identity – and posted them online too.”

YouTube has a roundup on how the Super Bowl impacted viewing and searching. “During the game, people spent 300K hours watching the Big Game ads1 and teaser videos on YouTube and overall we’ve seen nearly 4 million hours of Big Game ads and teasers watched so far. Big Game ads and teasers have been watched over 330 million times, with 60 percent of that coming from mobile devices — the most we’ve ever seen. And that game ain’t over yet.”

Do you have a Windows computer? Kick off your weekend with a patch fest. “Microsoft Windows users and those with Adobe Flash Player or Java installed, it’s time to update again! Microsoft released 13 updates to address some three dozen unique security vulnerabilities. Adobe issued security fixes for its Flash Player software that plugs at least 22 security holes in the widely-used browser component. Meanwhile, Oracle issued an unscheduled security fix for Java, its second security update for Java in as many weeks.”

RESEARCH AND OPINION

Interesting: using crowdsourced photos to analyze air pollution. “At the Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, a research group is using crowdsourced photos to create a low-cost alternative to air-pollution sensors. Called AirTick, the smartphone app they’ve designed will collect photos from users and analyze how hazy the environment looks. It’ll then check each image against official air quality data, and through machine-learning the app will eventually be able to predict pollution levels based on an image alone.” Good evening, Internet…

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